Does This Resume Make Me Look Fat? - Careers Articles

By Barbara Safani

Most job seekers I meet have some sort of "special circumstance" or blemish on their resume that they feel makes them unattractive to a hiring manager. For some, it's accounting for the dot-com they worked for that went bust after nine months or the year they took off from work to care for an aging parent or newborn. For others it's that "what the heck was I thinking when I took that job" faux pas or the "my boss was a raging lunatic and I had to get out fast" scenario.

Since almost everyone has at least one of these "special circumstances," they really aren't that special -- they are a part of life and part of most people's career journey. When crafting a compelling resume, the trick is to tell the story of your career path in a way that focuses on your best assets and makes you shine.

When we purchase clothing, we make decisions on what to buy based on what we think will best complement our greatest assets. We don't say, "My thighs are huge, so let me find a pair of pants that accentuates that."

But most of the resumes that job seekers write for themselves seem to do just that. They often scream "look at my mistakes" or yell "I know it's hard to figure out why I took this job, but here it is." They give equal blocks of information about each of the positions they have held regardless of the importance each position has to their target audience or the relevance of that position to their overall career strategy. When information is questionable or missing, employers come to their own conclusions about what really happened. And this bias could cost you the interview.

It doesn't have to be that way. I advocate for full disclosure on a resume -- listing all positions and explaining moves and leaves of absence when appropriate. It is perfectly acceptable to explain that you left a position to care for a family member (yes, right on the resume) or to explain that your position was terminated due to a layoff, company closing, etc. And while you wouldn't explain the "my boss was evil" scenario on a resume, there are ways to focus on your contributions in the position and call less attention to the short tenure.

We have one body and we make decisions every day on how to dress it in an effort to put our best foot forward. Doesn't it make sense to take your career story and dress it well to put your best foot forward in your job search?

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

5 Best Ways to Use Twitter for Your Job Search! | Career Rocketeer - Career Search and Personal Branding Blog

Twitter can be a tremendous, fast moving tool in your Job Search Toolbox. Here are 5 ways to get the most out of it.

1. Follow and read job search experts. The amount of excellent ideas, tips, leads, news, informative articles, and best practices going by all day long is amazing. Use Twellow’s directory for Employment > Career > Job Search to find excellent people to follow. You’ll find outstanding advice that applies to your situation… guaranteed.

2. Search for posted positions. Use Twitter’s search function to look for #jobs, or TwitterJobSearch to find a wealth of open positions that aren’t necessarily posted on job boards or company sites. Also search #splits for positions that recruiters use to split open searches with other recruiters. New positions are posted with excellent companies, large and small, every minute of every day. Get them in real time, early, and often.

3. Follow and read people in your field or industry. Industry chatter is incredible. News items, rumors, and trends get discussed daily. You can become much better versed in your field by ‘listening’. It can provide you with new and valuable information that can make you a better candidate in the interview process. Use Twellow to find appropriate people to follow.

4. Engage! Get in conversations with people. Ask questions, offer help, ReTweet (re-post) good information you see. Make sure to proofread everything you Tweet, and keep everything professional. Offering opinions about politics (unless you’re looking for a job in politics), or talking about your weekend at the bar will alienate half the people you want to connect to. Don’t sound discouraged or be a spreader of bad news. Keep your conversations focused on your area of expertise, or job search topics, and keep them positive.

5. Connect with people at your target companies. Many companies have an official presence on Twitter and post positions. There are also obviously many people on Twitter on their own that work at companies you many have an interest in. Professionally, ask questions, ask for referrals, offer information, and seek advice.

The reputation you build on Twitter, just like the image you create on any other site will either help or hurt your chances of finding the right position. Be positive, be professional, be helpful, be inquisitive, be engaging, be honest, and have fun!

Consistency is important. If you only Tweet once or twice per day, it won’t be enough for anyone to get to know you. Manage your time carefully, but do spend some time to build credibility and relationships. There are few places online where you can find so much information and develop so many contacts 24/7!

Use Twitter for your job search… it’s unlike anything else!


Author:

Harry Urschel has over 20 years experience as a technology recruiter in Minnesota. He currently operates as e-Executives, writes a blog for Job Seekers called The Wise Job Search, and can be found on Twitter as @eExecutives.

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

Personal Branding Tips & Career Advice by Career Expert Deborah Shane : CAREEREALISM

By CAREEREALISM-Approved Expert, Deborah Shane

The hot buzz now is creating your personal brand and how to stand out mostly in the social world. Because our challenge is through the web, computer, and the written word  it requires a different approach than meeting in person.

So, you are invited to a business party or event. You walk in and pretty much everyone is dressed in some form of black, blue, gray, brown, or beige. Then your eyes catch someone wearing a royal blue, cherry red, banana yellow, lavender something. Your eyes naturally go to that vivid color. Same with how people are communicating. Most people are standing a few feet from each other speaking to each other with the mouth moving but little else energy or emotion. One person you notice has a crowd around them and is using their hands, smiling, animated, having fun and engaging others to have fun and participate  too. Their energy is stimulating others energy.

We all have the potential to be this and do this.

Your Personal Brand, Personal Branding, Unique Selling Principle, Brand Essence is really all the same name and description for who you already are. Our given genetic DNA personalities give us everything we need to tap into this.

Our “persona” is both internal and external. For some it comes easier than others.

Some of the things we can do to develop this internal and external persona is:

  • Develop a professional appearance and image
  • Develop a positive mindset and attitude
  • Discover your communication style
  • Nurture and manage relationships
  • Mentor others
  • Advocate and support others
  • Volunteer and give back

I love this post from Seth Godin’s blog, Finding Your Brand Essence. It really resonated with me.

“Clothes don’t make the man, the man makes the man. Clothes (and the brand) just amplify that.”

How are you discovering and creating your internal and external persona?

Did you enjoy this article? You can read more articles by this expert here. Better yet, you could get the best career advice daily by subscribing to us via e-mail!

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CAREEREALISM Expert, Deborah Shane delivers business education and professional skill development specializing in women in business, those in career transition, sales and personal and social brand strategy and integration. Follow her on Twitter and LinkedIn.

The photo for this article is provided by Shutterstock.

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

TheWiseJobSearch: You won’t hire me because I’m unemployed? REALLY???

OL24CNN.com posted an article titled “In the job hunt, the stigma of being laid off is hard to erase”. In it, Stephanie Chen, writes:

“As if securing work in a jobless recovery isn't tricky enough, being labeled unemployed brings additional obstacles.”

I was privileged to be interviewed by Stephanie for this article and quoted briefly:

“Many companies will consider hiring jobless applicants, said Harry Urschel, an independent recruiter at e-Executives for more than two decades. He thinks many employers have become more understanding because job cuts are so widespread.”

While I can attest to the fact that there are some companies that do look more critically at candidates that are unemployed, I can also say…

That there are many others that view this time in the market as an opportunity to pick talent that might otherwise be hard to attract.

Can being unemployed be an obstacle? Certainly. Just as being “too old” can be an obstacle, being “too young”, having had too many jobs, having worked at one job too long, being a minority, not being a minority, being over-qualified, being under-qualified, being under-educated, being over-educated… and on and on. Depending on the organization, and the individual looking at your background, any of those factors may be an issue… or none of them might be. Regardless of professional background, or personal circumstances, anyone can find external reasons they are not getting the calls and job offers they are hoping for. My experience tells me that people are usually not selected for jobs for different reasons than they think. It’s usually easier to believe a bias than the reality of the situation.

Your objective in pursuing any opportunity is to show you are the best person for the job… despite any perceived shortcomings. As I’ve written about before… “For every person that says they can’t get a job because of a particular challenge, there is someone else with the same situation that did get a job.” It may take some additional thought, persistence, or creative approach, however, virtually any objection can be overcome when handled appropriately. Everyone can find some reason that is hindering their job hunt if they look hard enough. Don’t focus on why you may not be considered, focus on the unique value you bring to the potential employer!

In this market, when employers are receiving dozens, or hundreds of applicants for every opening, it’s not good enough to submit an application online, or send an email, and wait for a call. That’s all the vast majority of applicants do, and it does nothing to distinguish you from all the others. Even if you’re a “perfect” fit, it’s difficult for your resume to be noticed among the sea of others. Taking extra initiative to find a contact at the organization, proactively call and reach out in additional ways is the only way to stand out from the crowd.

If you’re not getting calls from your applications, it’s likely that it has nothing to do with the fact that you’re unemployed, or “too old”, or under-qualified, or anything else. It’s more likely that you are just getting lost in the crowd.

Apply some more effort to get noticed and you will make far greater progress in your job hunt!

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

Great Job Search Strategy Or A Powerful Imagination?

crazy heart, jeff bridges, job search, strategy, psychology

I am influenced by movies.  Always have been.  I get provoked to act or think about how my life is going when I have another example for comparison.

The most recent movie that played this role for me was Crazy Heart starring Jeff Bridges as a washed up old country singer.  He’s trying to keep a career going by playing in some pretty small clubs and bowling alleys across the U.S.

I’m also a lover of music.  I think it can be a great driver and companion to life experiences.  Music can also play a strong role in your job search psychology.  And the music in Crazy Heart is excellent.  So I bought the CD and have now over-played like i do every new piece of music.

One of the songs on the album reminded me of a post I wrote many months back about optimism.  The danger of optimism in job search.  And you might ask:  “Is there still optimism out there?  Really?  And what’s wrong with optimism?”

Well, nothing.  As long as optimism doesn’t lead you to feeling complacent.  And keep you from taking action to build a great strategy.

The song is called Fallin’ & Flyin’ and the key line is:

“It’s funny how fallin’ feels like flyin’ for a little while”

In job search, career and life it may mean that you are not paying attention as closely as you should.  Or that you are distracted by false signs of momentum.

As I said, it’s not that I don’t believe in optimism.  I do.  But I worry about people who believe they are doing everything they need to be doing.  When they are not.

So this week I am presenting about job search strategy in Huntington Beach.  If you are local, would love to have you there.  I am bringing to life a post I wrote a few months back called One Day In Job Search.  It identifies each of the days that lead up to your eventual job offer.  So there is optimism in that post but it is framed in a strategy to enable each of those days.  Instead of simply hoping for them.

Do you have a solid strategy for your job search?  Are you sure?

The way to be sure is to write it down. If you can’t write it down in detail, well, is it really there?  For example:

  1. What are your job search objectives?
  2. Who are your target companies?
  3. How are you using networking to create new relationships in your industry?

You also need to be paying attention to signs that your job search is on the right track.  Or not.  Measuring the success of your effort allows you to replace optimism with planned and effective action.

So my call to action for you.  For this Monday.  Is to ask yourself the question:

Do you have a great job search strategy or a powerful imagination?

If you say yes to strategy, prove it.  To yourself.  If not, is it time to build some real structure into your effort?

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

Personal Brands: The Audition | Personal Branding Blog - Dan Schawbel

From the time you leave your home, consider that you are being auditioned for the job you are seeking.  Your personal brand starts to get its early morning workout when you cross the threshold of your door.

How coherent is your personal brand promise, given what you actually deliver?

The person you brushed by without apology, your sitting steadfastly on the train when an elderly person could have used your seat, the meager tip you left at the diner: that is your real personal brand.

Your prickly reaction when you make a mistake, the indifference you show the speaker when you talk during a presentation, the lack of planning that leaves you to blow a deadline: that is your real personal brand.

Without thinking too much, pick just one:

1. Would you rather be right?

2. Would you rather be loved?

3. Would you rather be the best?

If you would rather be any of these, given who you really are, consider what you must do to change from the inside out.

It’s not just that your future boss or client may be sitting on the train or glance by your check and change at the diner booth: it’s that you are going to be you in every situation that lasts longer than a first job interview.

Anything you want is yours to lose or win

There is no magic threshold. You can’t suddenly become a better person because now it’s work and not home, or it’s work and not friendship. You are who you are with a very thin layer of veneer to chip and reveal your real personal brand.

Stop with the cheap disguises. Stop telling yourself that you deserved the job. That your co-workers are wrong. That you could do so much better if you owned the business instead of doing your job.

In the USA, we are heading toward the day we celebrate as Independence Day. Make this more than a vacation day. Figure out what you want to shake off – what chip on your shoulder you’d like independence from.

Let the July 4th fireworks be a metaphor for your breaking through your dark side and lighting up the world.

Author:

Nance Rosen is the author of Speak Up! & Succeed. She speaks to business audiences around the world and is a resource for press, including print, broadcast and online journalists and bloggers covering social media and careers. Read more at NanceRosenBlog. Twitter name: nancerosen.

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

100+ Free Salary Surveys and Resources From Around the World in 2010 | JobMob

Unemployed lawyer salary demands

How to use this list

  • The list only includes sites that are credible or that explain where their numbers come from.
  • Compare results across multiple sites for best results. Salaries are always changing and many of these sites are based on employee-submitted information.
  • If you know of any other 2010 salary resources that aren’t in the list, please suggest them in the comments below.

What’s in this list?

  • Salary surveys – created by surveying readers about their salaries.
  • Salary databases – readers contribute information about their jobs, sometimes in exchange for access to the rest of the database.
  • Salary reports – a salary report can be written from a company’s own data or compiled from a combination of salary surveys, government statistics, company disclosures, etc.
  • Salary or wage search – search on a profession and the results will show typical earnings.
  • Salary calculators or checkers, wage/worth estimators - you fill out a form of questions about your profession and the calculated result is an estimate of the salary you should be earning. If you’re employed, this a good way to judge how fair your pay is.

2010 Global Directory of Salary Surveys

Click your flag to jump to the links for your country:

Flag of Australia Flag of Canada Flag of India Flag of Ireland Flag of Israel Flag of Philippines Flag of Singapore Flag of South Africa Flag of United Kingdom Flag of United States Globe(International)

If your country isn’t among these flags, check the other resources in the International section at the end.

Flag of AustraliaAustralia

  1. ARN Salary Calculator – professional and academic jobs
  2. LiveSalary – “a free community-based website where people exchange salary data”
  3. Robert Half Salary Guides – free but requires giving contact information.
  4. 2010 IT Skills & Salary Report – requires free signup
  5. 2010 SEO/SEM Salary Survey Australia & New Zealand

Flag of CanadaCanada

  1. Wowjobs.ca’s Canada Salary Search – lets you search on specific keywords, and even compare among different job titles.
  2. Yahoo! HotJobs Salary – they actually use PayScale.com for information, but Yahoo’s interface is nicer.
  3. SalaryExpert Salary Search
  4. APEGS 2010 Salary Survey (pdf) – engineers and geoscientists (in Saskatchewan)
  5. IAB Canada’s 2010 Interactive Advertising Salary Guide (xls)

Flag of IndiaIndia

  1. TDS on Salary Calculator 2010 (xls) – for lawyers, requires free signup.
  2. India FRESHERS – IT/Software Salary Survey
  3. SalaryMap – all kinds of industries
  4. Paycheck.in – general purpose for private sector, public sector and not-for-profit.
  5. Google groups India Salary Trends – general, uses information from Payscale.com (see below)

Flag of IrelandIreland

  1. Salesjobs.ie’s 2010 Salary Survey Guide – sales, business development, account management
  2. Accounting Technician Salary Guide 2010 – financial positions such as accountants, finance & payroll managers, etc.
  3. Irishjobs.ie Salary Surveys
  4. CPL Salary Guide 2010 (pdf)
  5. Hudson 2010 Ireland Salary Guide (pdf)
  6. Brightwater Salary Survey 2010 (pdf)
  7. Sigmar Salary Survey 2010 (pdf)

Flag of Israel Israel

  1. Computer Jobs in Israel 2010 Salary Survey
  2. CPS’s Hitech Salary Surveys (Hebrew)
  3. Nisha Group’s Salary Table (Hebrew) – hitech, sales, marketing
  4. Check Compare (Hebrew) – “the people’s salary survey”, where anyone can share their salary. Mostly hitech.
  5. Dialog Hitech Salary Survey (Hebrew)
  6. Maskorot (Hebrew)
  7. Jobinfo (Hebrew)
  8. Ethosia (Hebrew) – focused on hitech, but lists many non-hitech jobs in that industry, such as marketing and finance

Flag of the Philippines Philippines

  1. JobStreet Salary Report – numbers for many professions.
  2. Salary, Salaries and Wages in the Philippines
  3. Careerjet.ph – job listings with specified salaries

Flag of SingaporeSingapore

  1. Salary.sg – Your Salary in Singapore – a blog about salaries & income in Singapore where you can search for results by position
  2. 2010 Hudson Salary Information 2010 – pdf downloads for different industries
  3. Ministry of Manpower Wage Search
  4. Ambition Market Trends & Salary Reports – Accounting & Finance, Sales & Marketing, Banking & Executives (covers Hong Kong too)
  5. The 2010 Hays Salary Survey & Guide – PDF salary guides for 17 industries & professions in Singapore
  6. Michael Page International’s Singapore 2010 Salary & Employment Forecast (pdf)
  7. Kelly Services Singapore Employment Outlook & Salary Guide 2009/2010 (pdf)

Flag of South AfricaSouth Africa

  1. EDM Recruitment Salary Survey Results for 2010 – engineers
  2. Mba.co.za Salary Survey – MBAs
  3. Ad Talent Salary Survey 2010
  4. EDM Recruitmernt Salary Survey Results for 2010
  5. Accountants On Call Salary Survey Accounting & Finance 2010 (pdf)

Flag of United KingdomUnited Kingdom

  1. Paywizard.co.uk – will tell you what other people are earning for doing your job
  2. Reed.co.uk’s Salary Calculator – a salary search engine, you can search by position and location
  3. Jobs.ac.uk Salary Checker – check the salary of a specific type of job
  4. ITJobsWatch tracking system – track salary trends per position
  5. CWJobs’ Salary Checker
  6. Michael Page International Salary Surveys
  7. MSN Money UK’s Salary Centre – salary information by industry, easy to read
  8. Workhound.co.uk Salary Tracker – salary search engine, nice interface
  9. MajorPlayers.co.uk Salary Survey 2010 – content & editorial, creative & design, marketing, PR, and many others
  10. Reed HR Salary Survey 2010 (pdf)

Flag of United StatesUnited States

  1. AIGA|Aquent Survey of Design Salaries 2010
  2. AACSB International US Salary Survey Report (pdf) – deans, professors, other academic positions by faculty
  3. Glassdoor – salary details about specific jobs for specific employers or company
  4. ComputerJobs.com Salary Ticker – programmers, developers, etc.
  5. Salary.com Salary Checker
  6. Indeed.com Salary Search
  7. SalaryExpert Salary Search
  8. Jobnob Salary Search – find salaries by position at specific companies
  9. Job Search Intelligence Salary Calculator
  10. Global Knowledge 2010 IT Skills and Salary Report (pdf) – requires free signup

GlobeInternational

  1. PayScale – salary information for 94 countries
  2. GISjobs Salary Survey – salary information from GIS professionals around the world
  3. Internet Engineering Center – Salary Survey for engineers in the USA, India, UAE, Canada, Malaysia, UK, Australia, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, Germany, Qatar, Egypt, Italy, South Africa, Philippines, Nigeria, Kuwait, France and Japan
  4. 2010 Hays Salary Guide for Asia (pdf) – covers Singapore, Japan, China and Hong Kong
  5. SalaryExpert (international version) – only one position at a time can be checked.
  6. Robert Walters 2010 Salary Surveys – pdf downloads for Australia, Belgium, China, France, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, Luxembourg, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, The Netherlands, United Kingdom and the United States

Subscribe to JobMob via RSS or email and follow me on Twitter to learn how salary surveys can help you get the highest pay you deserve.

--Jacob Share

Posted via email from AndyWergedal